The invention relates to a lifting hardware for a base which can be lowered into an opening of a work surface, comprising a support frame which holds the base and can be adjusted vertically relative to the work surface by means of a drive.
Lifting hardware of this type is used for example in kitchen corner cabinets and may have one or more bases which are arranged one upon the other in a shelf configuration, the bases being provided for disposing objects which, in this way, can be accommodated in the interior of the corner cabinet which is difficult to access, by lowering the bases through the work surface into the corner cabinet by means of the lifting hardware.
Since the base fills the opening of the work surface almost completely, contusions are likely to occur if someone reaches with her hand into the opening of the work surface while the base is lowered to the level of the work surface. For this case, it is known to provide an emergency stop circuit which disables the drive when, while the lifting hardware is lowered, the resistance to overcome exceeds a certain value.
It is an object of the invention to provide a lifting hardware with improved safety.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by the feature that the exterior periphery of the support frame is arranged at a distance from the edges of the opening of the work surface in the horizontal direction; the base rests loosely on the support frame in vertical direction and is held on the support frame in the horizontal direction in a form-fitting manner by four engagement structures which form the corners of a rectangle; each engagement structure has a vertically oriented web on one of the support frame and the base, and a complementary plug-in slot on the other of the support frame and the base and fixes the relative position of the support frame and the base only in the horizontal direction normal to the web; and the plug-in slots are oriented at right angles to one another for each pair of mutually adjacent engagement structures.
The invention provides a mechanical self-acting contusion guard, because, due to the inwardly offset arrangement of the support frame, there occurs only a shear movement between the base and the edge of the opening of the work surface, but the base can be lifted upward with almost no resistance. Nevertheless, the engagement structures assure that the base is fixed on the support frame in a form-fitting manner in each direction in the horizontal plane.
If someone reaches into the opening of the work surface and the base is thereby lifted on one side while the lifting hardware is lowered, at least one of the plug-in slots on the opposite side is oriented in parallel with the side of the base that has been lifted, and this plug-in slot and the web engaging therein define a tilt axis about which the base can be tilted.
The dependent claims specify useful details of the invention which achieve an improvement in safety as well as an exact alignment of the base in vertical and horizontal direction.
An embodiment example will now be described in conjunction with the drawings, wherein:
The lifting hardware 10 has a support frame 16 which supports a base 18 which, in the example shown, has an approximately quadratic shape and fills the opening 12 almost completely when the base 18 and the work surface 14 are level with one another.
On one side, the support frame has a bracket 20 with which it is mounted on a vertical column 21 (not shown here but in
The base 18 is held on the support frame by means of four engagement structures 22 which form the corners of a rectangle and are arranged at the corners of the support frame and the base in this example. The outer periphery of the support frame is formed by four legs 24 that are connected to one another at the corners of the frame and are in this case configured as flat bars in an upright configuration. Internally, the support frame is stiffened by struts 26 that converge in a V configuration towards the position of the bracket 20. Each of the engagement structures 22 has a support 30 which has an approximately L-shaped contour and is plugged with the free end of one of its arms onto one of the legs 24 that converge at the corresponding corner, the support being also supported on the leg that extends at right angles to said one leg. In its horizontal top surface, the support forms a straight plug-in slot 32, and a web 34 formed at the bottom side of the base 18 engages in this plug-in slot. In this way, the horizontal position of the base 18 in the corner in consideration is fixed in the direction normal to the plug-in slot 32 and the web 34.
The four engagement structures have an identical design but are arranged in positions respectively rotated by 90°, so that the plug-in slots 32 of two engagement structures 22 which are not arranged diagonally to one another but are adjacent to one another on the same side of the base and the support frame extend at right angles to one another. As a whole, the position of the base 18 is thereby fixed in the horizontal plane in both translational degrees of freedom and in the rotational degree of freedom (rotation about the vertical axis).
The legs 24 of the support frame have a considerable distance in horizontal direction from the edge of the opening 12 of the work surface, whereby the risk of contusions between the work surface and the support frame is reduced to practically zero. If someone reaches into the opening 12 of the work surface with her hand while the support frame and the base are lowered, and one side of the base hits the hand, the base 18 can easily be lifted upwards from the support frame. In general, this will cause the base to tilt about an axis that is defined by one of the two plug-in slots on the opposite side of the base. Because of the large spacing between the lifted side of the base and the web 34 that is received in the plug-in slot that forms the tilt axis, the web 34 performs only a very small pivotal movement in the direction normal to the plug-in slot. For this reason, the web needs to have only little play, if any, in the plug-in slot. In the example shown here, the support 30 is formed by a plastic member in which the walls of the plug-in slot have a certain elasticity, so that they can receive the web 34 without play and nevertheless permit a pivotal movement of the base.
At least the bottom side of the base 18 is formed by a plastic member which, in addition to the webs 34 mentioned already, has further webs 36 which reinforce the structure and of which only some have been shown here. Other webs on the bottom side of the base form a peripheral outer frame 38 and, further inwardly, a peripheral inner frame 40. However, even the inner frame 40 is still outside of the support frame 16.
When the base 18 rests on the engagement structures 22, the position of the base in the vertical direction is not determined by the webs 34 and the plug-in slots 32 but instead by height-adjustable support plates 42 that are arranged at the inner corners of the support frame 16 and are embraced by the L-shaped support 30. By means of the support plates 42, the vertical position of the base 18 may be adjusted at all four corners such that the base is aligned exactly in parallel with the plane of the work surface 14.
In the sectional view shown in
In the sectional view in
In
As is shown in
The engagement of the guide profile in the holder 60 prevents the column 21 from tilting (to the left side in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2016 107 168 U | Dec 2016 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2017/080520 | 11/27/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2018/114235 | 6/28/2018 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2861857 | Lee et al. | Nov 1958 | A |
2875012 | Riley | Feb 1959 | A |
3361510 | McDermott | Jan 1968 | A |
4050386 | Kellogg | Sep 1977 | A |
4577821 | Edmo | Mar 1986 | A |
5694864 | Langewellpott | Dec 1997 | A |
7410226 | Meskan | Aug 2008 | B1 |
20110155867 | Griepentrog | Jun 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2435720 | Feb 1975 | DE |
19812959 | Sep 1999 | DE |
202008006543 | Sep 2009 | DE |
202012101785 | Jun 2012 | DE |
102012009995 | Nov 2013 | DE |
2195879 | Apr 1988 | GB |
2005118456 | Dec 2005 | WO |
Entry |
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Translated Description DE202008006543U1, 10 pages (Year: 2009). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190313791 A1 | Oct 2019 | US |